Hap's Aerial Enterprises, Inc., appeals from a summary judgment dismissing its complaint against General Aviation Corporation. Hap's claims damages for General's negligent inspection of an aircraft performed for its prior owner, Regal Beloit Corporation. The issue is whеther Hap's, as a subsequent buyer of the used aircraft, can recover purely economic damages in a negligence action against General. We conclude that if General's negligence is established, Hap's can recover damages for its economic loss, unless public policy considerations prevent recovery. The facts should be developed to allow the trial court not only to determine if General was negligent but to evaluate the policy considerations. We therefore reverse and remand.
Triаl courts and appellate courts apply the same summary judgment methodology.
Green Spring Farms v. Kersten,
The complaint alleges that on July 13, 1988, the defendant General Aviation performed a "hot section inspection" on the engines of an aircraft. It is undis *461 puted that General Aviation inspected the aircraft for its then owner, Regal Beloit Corporation, and that as part of its inspection, General had to check each turbine wheel and grind its surface to obtain the required tolerance. Hap's bought the aircraft from Regal soon after General's inspection. In October 1988, Hap's sold the aircraft, subject to a "pre-buy inspection." During that inspection Hap's learned that because General negligently performed its July inspection, Hap's had to repair the engines in order to sell the aircraft. Hap's incurred repair expenses of $22,997 and lost $535 in interest on its sale. It sues General Aviation for those amounts.
Relying primarily on
Sunnyslope Grading, Inc. v. Miller, Bradford & Risberg, Inc.,
It is true that a commercial purchaser of goods or equipment from a seller cannot recover in this state for purely commercial losses which the buyer attributes to the seller's negligence. The
Sunnyslope
court established that law.
Id.
at 921,
We agree with the weight of authority which supports the proposition that the legislative protections granted by the Uniform Commercial Code are not to be buttressed by tort principles and recovery. The duty to provide a product which functions to сertain specifications is contractual. If a commercial purchaser wants a machine of higher quality, better durability or one with a better warranty, the purchaser is free to negotiate in the marketplace.
Id.
at 916,
But Hap's bought the aircraft from Regal Beloit Corрoration, not from General. No commercial transaction occurred between Hap's and General. Nothing in the complaint discloses any contact whatever between Hap's and General. Hap's simply bought an aircraft which it claims General had negligently inspected, and that negligence caused damages to Hap's. 2
The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit believes that the Wisconsin Supreme Court would extend the economic or commercial loss doctrine recognized in
Sunnyslope
to a commercial purchaser
*463
such as Hap's who asserts а claim against a tortfeasor not in privity with the purchaser.
3
The Seventh Circuit held that the owner of an office in Wisconsin could not recover in tort against U.S. Steel for the cost of replacing defective steel U.S. Steel sold to a subcontractor who fabricated it intо panels which the general contractor installed on the building.
Miller,
In our view, however, when compared with Wisconsin precedent, the analysis in Rardin shows why the Wisconsin Supreme Court is unlikely to approve the Miller court's application of the "economic loss” doctrine.
*464 In Rardin the рlaintiff bought a used printing press from Whitacre for use in his business. The contract provided that Whitacre was responsible only for such damage to the press as might be incurred due to the fault or negligence of its own employees, agents, contractors or representativеs. Whitacre hired the defendant T & D Machine Handling to dismantle and load the press on a truck. T & D negligently performed its tasks and damaged the press. Rardin incurred repair costs and lost business profits during the repairs and sued T & D for its damages. The Rardin court held that T & D had no liability under Illinois law in negligence for Rardin's economic lоsses.
The Rardin court reasoned that to conclude that a person is "negligent is to affirm that the costs of care to him were less than the costs of his carelessness to all who might be hurt by it; that, essentially, is what negligence means, in Illinois and elsewhere." Id. at 26. The court said that
[i]n deciding how much effort to expend on being careful — and therefore how far to reduce the probability of a careless accident — the potential injurer must have at least a rough idea of the extent of liability.
Id. T & D was not privy to the circumstances of the owners of the presses, did not deal direсtly with Rardin, and knew nothing about his business, and could not have determined the financial consequences to Rardin if the press was damaged. Id. Rardin, the court said, could have protected himself against the financial consequences of unexpected delay. He could have contracted out some of his printing work in advance, bought business interruption insurance, or negotiated for a liqui *465 dated damages clause in his contract with his seller to compensate him for the delay. Id. at 27.
Perhaps Hap's could have taken measures comparable to those the Rardin court recommended to protect itself from economic loss resulting from the defective condition of the aircraft it bought from Regal. However, the present law of Wisconsin does not prevent Hap's from recovering commercial or eсonomic damages caused by the negligence of a third-party who dealt with Regal. The Wisconsin Supreme Court has twice held that the defendant who negligently provides services to one person may be liable for economic losses resulting to a third person, unless publiс policy dictates otherwise.
In
A.E. Inv. Corp. v. Link Builders, Inc.,
In
Citizens State Bank v. Timm, Schmidt & Co.,
Distinctions exist between the facts before us and the facts in
A.E.
and
Citizens.
For one thing, in those cases the defendants were professionals.
8
For another, in
A.E.,
the architects knеw that the plaintiff supermarket operator was to operate a store in the building the architect had designed, and in
Citizens,
a member of the accounting firm may have known that the statements his firm prepared would be used by the bank.
Citizens,
We conclude that the matter must be remanded to the trial court to determine whether General negligently inspected the engines of the aircraft Hap's bought from Regal and whether that negligence caused the economic damages Hap's claims in its complaint. If General contends that public policy reasons should protect it from liability, each side should be allowed to present evidence on that issue.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed and remanded with directions.
Notes
Sunnyslope bought the backhoes from a dealer for the manufacturer but the manufacturer had extended each purchaser a written warranty which limited manufacturer's liability to rеplacement of defective parts and provided that the manufacturer was not liable for any other damage, whether direct, incidental or consequential. Sunnyslope sought to recover lost profits and the cost of repairing the equipment when the manufacturer did not breach its warranty.
In
Tony Spychalla Farms, Inc. v. Hopkins Agric. Chem. Co.,
The Seventh Circuit's interpretation of Wisconsin law does not bind us.
See LeClair v. Natural Resources Bd.,
In
Midwest Knitting Mills, Inc. v. United States,
Thus, the
Rardin
court's declaration that negligence means that the costs of care to the actor are less than the costs to all who might be harmed,
Rardin,
The fundamental principle of Wisconsin negligence law does not apply to the liability of attorneys to non-clients. An attorney is not liable to a non-client plaintiff for mere negligence.
Green Spring Farms v. Kersten,
The public policy considerations outlined in
Citizens,
(1) The injury is too remote from the negligence; or, (2) the injury is wholly out of proportion to the culpability of the negligent tortfeasor; or, (3) in retrospеct it appears highly extraordinary that the negligence has brought about the harm; or, (4) recovery places too unreasonable a burden on the negligent tortfeasor; or, (5) recovery is too likely to open the way for fraudulent claims; or, (6) recovery will enter а field having no sensible or just stopping point.
In
Milwaukee Partners v. Collins Engineers, Inc.,
